Patrick
Cummins may have ruffled Daniel
Cormier’s feathers ahead of their short-notice showdown at
UFC
170, but the Olympian nevertheless put forth a calm, efficient
and dominant performance on fight night.

A former wrestling partner of Cormier’s, Cummins made waves just
over a week ago when he answered the call to replace an injured
Rashad
Evans, claiming on Fox Sports Live that he had once made
Cormier cry during a training session. The comment appeared to get
under Cormier’s skin, so much so that the typically reserved
ex-heavyweight even shoved Cummins at the pre-fight press
conference.

The buildup was not indicative of the quality of the actual fight,
however, as Cormier quickly steamrolled his comparatively
inexperienced foe. Despite the perceived bad blood ahead of the
matchup, Cormier revealed after the fight that what took place in
the Octagon was not fueled by anger or emotion.

“When you start hearing things about what happened in the wrestling
room... I like to keep that stuff personal. I was going through a
lot of things at the time,” Cormier said following his win at
Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas.

“It did upset me, but once I get into the cage, my emotion doesn’t
drive me. I fight how I’m going to fight, regardless. He can make
me mad, and we can fuss at the press conference, but I’ll never let
that carry me in the cage. By the time I got to the Octagon, I was
fine. He could have been anyone else, and nothing would have
changed. I would have competed the same exact way that I did.”

Cormier rocked Cummins with a short right uppercut and then swarmed
him with a flurry of punches, knocking his foe to the mat before
sealing the deal with more strikes to the head of his prone
opponent.

“The thing I took from the fight more than anything was that my
power carries me a lot further than it did at heavyweight,” said
Cormier. “The same uppercut that I hurt Patrick with the first time
[I threw it], I landed it on [Frank] Mir probably 15 times. I did
it against [Roy] Nelson and Josh Barnett,
and those guys kind of just ate them, but it visibly affected
[Cummins] tonight. I think my power is going to carry me a lot
further in this division, because I’m not as small compared to the
guys I’m fighting.”

With a successful light heavyweight debut now under his belt,
Cormier plans to stay focused as the division’s top 10 shakes out
over the next several months.

“Whether I’m fighting or not, I can’t get so far away from my
weight that I have to restart this whole process. I’m going to stay
as close as I need to be,” said Cormier. “I would like to fight
again, but it seems like everybody is tied up. I guess I’ll just
stay ready, and if someone gets injured, they can give me a call.
I’ll fight anytime.”